Luyu Huang is an independent developer who turns the ancient headache of vocabulary drilling into a passive, almost subliminal experience. DWords, the publisher’s sole public release, overlays a customizable “danmaku” stream of foreign-language flashcards directly onto the Windows desktop. Instead of opening a dedicated app, users continue to browse, code, or watch lectures while new words glide across the screen in configurable fonts, colors, and speeds; spaced-repetition logic quietly schedules reappearances so that items needing reinforcement return more frequently. The software supports multilingual dictionaries, user-defined word lists, and audio pronunciation, making it suitable for casual travelers, test-takers grinding for GRE or TOEFL, and polyglots maintaining several languages at once. Because the弹幕 layer respects transparency and hot-key toggles, it never fully hijacks the workspace, letting learners keep an eye on incoming vocabulary without breaking workflow. Keyboard shortcuts pause, skip, or star tricky terms, and daily statistics chart retention rates so progress stays measurable. Lightweight and portable, DWords consumes only a sliver of CPU and RAM, so even low-spec laptops can run it alongside IDEs, PDF readers, or streaming video without stutter. Luyu Huang’s single-title catalog thus sits at the intersection of productivity utilities and language-education aids, offering a minimalist, almost ambient alternative to heavyweight SRS suites. The program is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always fetch the latest version, and can be installed individually or batched with other applications.
Show words as Danmaku on the screen to help you memorize them.
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